Hastings made the contribution on Oct. 9 to a legal defense fund established by Rodriguez, who will enter a plea next week to allegations that he laundered $24,000 through straw donors into his 2015 school board election campaign.

Rodriguez signed papers establishing a legal defense fund on Sept. 18, five days after the L.A. County District Attorney's Office announced he would face felony charges for conspiracy, perjury and filing false documents.

State law allows for elected officials or candidates to form committees to raise money for their legal defense in proceedings related to either to their campaigns or their jobs as public officials. Elected officials cannot, however, use legal defense fund money to pay fines or costs associated with a legal judgement.

In Rodriguez's case, money raised through that fund can be used to defray costs related not only to his criminal case, but also for his defense in an ongoing inquiry by the L.A. City Ethics Commission related to the alleged political money laundering.